UNESCO need to look at Karabakh without being hypocritical – Turkey
Turkey's communications director said that the visit to Aghdam made clear the magnitude of the Karabakh victory, but was saddened to see the ruined cities.
Turkey’s communications director said that international organisations, particularly UNESCO, need to look at Karabakh without being hypocritical.
Fahrettin Altun made the remarks during a visit to Azerbaijan's Aghdam region, which was liberated from Armenian occupation during last year's Nagorno-Karabakh war. He was accompanied by high-ups and media representatives of Turkic Council member countries.
"There was invasion, barbarism, persecution in this land. Cultural treasures were destroyed. We see it here with our eyes," he said.
Hikmet Hajiyev, aide to the president of Azerbaijan, Kyrgyz Culture Minister Kairat Imanaliev, Uzbekistan Presidency Information and Mass Communications Agency head Asadjon Khodjayev, Kazakh Vice Minister of Information Askhat Oralov, and Hungarian State Secretary for Security Policies Peter Sztaray also attended.
Serdar Karagoz, the chairman and director general of Anadolu Agency, along with other media officials was also among those who saw the destruction caused by the Armenians.
"There was invasion, barbarism, persecution in this land. Cultural treasures were destroyed. We see it here with our eyes," Turkey's Communications Director Fahrettin Altun (second from L) said.
Delegation mourns destruction
Underlining the importance of Azerbaijan's victory in Nagorno-Karabakh for Azerbaijan, Turkey, and the region, Altun said the decades-long occupation was brought to end with President Ilham Aliyev's determination.
Turkey under the leadership of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has also supported the rightful struggle of Azerbaijan, he said.
Turkey's Communications Director Fahrettin Altun said that the visit to Aghdam made clear the magnitude of the Karabakh victory, but they were saddened by seeing the ruined cities.
Altun said that the visit to Aghdam made clear the magnitude of the Karabakh victory, but they were saddened by seeing the ruined cities.
“Cultural treasures have been destroyed, but the institutions responsible for protecting cultural treasures in the world remained silent," he said.
"... These cultural treasures were completely destroyed to erase the traces of Turkishness and Islam.”
He added: “But they didn't succeed, they won't succeed. Because these lands are the lands of the Turks and Islam. The cruelty of the tyrants and their barbaric policies could not find any response.”
He said the real owners of these lands liberated Karabakh, adding that one million Azerbaijani brothers will return to these places with Turkish support.
READ MORE: Turkey, Russia to start monitoring Karabakh truce as of Saturday
Recalling Turkish President Erdogan’s statement regarding regional peace, Altun said: “By ending the occupation here, we made peace permanent.” 11 April 2021
Recalling Turkish President Erdogan’s statement regarding regional peace, Altun said: “By ending the occupation here, we made peace permanent.”
“We have shown that as the real actors of the region, we will never allow such an invasion again ... this region will turn into an attraction center of the world. We stand by our Azerbaijani brothers with all our efforts and strength in this regard."
READ MORE: Azerbaijan and Armenia swap prisoners after peace deal
'War crime'
Altun and others also visited Azerbaijan's Ganja city, which was attacked by missiles by Armenian forces during the last year's conflict. Scores of citizens were killed and injured as a result.
"It is a war crime, a crime against humanity to murder people, including children, in civilian settlements when people are sleeping," Altun said.
Six weeks of intense conflict between Baku and Yerevan ended after they signed a Russia-brokered agreement on Nov. 10, 2020 to end the fighting and work toward a comprehensive resolution.
During the 44-day conflict, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages, which have fallen into a dilapidated state since the Armenian invasion in the early 1990s.